Locally led marine conservation

REGISTERED CHARITY 1098893
Locally led marine conservation
Putting communities at the heart of marine management
Blue Ventures, Level 2 Annex, Omnibus Business Centre, 39-41 North Road, London N7 9DP, United Kingdom
Tel: +44 (0)207 697 8598
Web: www.blueventures.org
By communities, for communities
Experience from around the world shows that managing
Found throughout the world’s tropical and subtropical
fisheries and marine resources works best when
seas, and encompassing diverse approaches to
responsibility is placed in the hands of local communities.
management and governance, their sizes and contexts
This is particularly true in low-income countries, where
vary widely, but all share the common theme of placing
there is often limited capacity and infrastructure for
local communities at the heart of management.
fisheries management and conservation.
From as far afield as Fiji, Kenya and Costa Rica, LMMAs
Locally Managed Marine Areas (LMMAs) are areas of ocean
have proven highly effective in reducing local conflicts
managed by coastal communities to help protect fisheries
over fisheries, conserving marine biodiversity, and
and safeguard marine biodiversity.
improving catches.
Blue Ventures works with communities in Madagascar
and the Indian Ocean region, supporting them to
establish locally appropriate governance systems for
the marine resources upon which traditional coastal
livelihoods depend.
LMMAs in
Madagascar
In just ten years, Blue Ventures has
supported coastal communities in
Madagascar and the Indian Ocean
region to establish dynamic and locally
appropriate fisheries management
strategies and governance systems that
improve fisheries sustainability and
climate change resilience.
Madagascar’s grassroots marine
conservation movement has developed
some of the world’s largest LMMAs,
and the Government of Madagascar
recently committed to triple the extent
of the country’s marine protected
areas, with a special emphasis on local
management.
LMMAS IN
MADAGASCAR
65 LMMAs
in Madagascar;
the majority focused on the vast coral
reef and mangrove ecosystems of the
country’s west coast
LMMAs cover
>11,000km
2
Madagascar’s
11% ofcontinental
shelf
Living with the sea
Our LMMA programme focuses on three zones
along Madagascar’s west coast where fishers have
experienced severe declines in catches over recent
decades.
Through the use of Dina – customary laws that are
recognised by the government – many of our partner
communities have designed effective rules that can be
enforced locally to ban destructive fishing practices,
protect endangered species and designate priority
marine areas for protection.
To ensure the long-term financial sustainability of
these LMMAs, we are working to develop a variety of
mechanisms including marine ecotourism programmes,
seafood supply chain incentive schemes, ecocertifications for sustainable fisheries, and payment for
ecosystem services such as mangrove REDD+.
LMMAS SUPPORTED BY BLUE VENTURES
75+
communities /
40,000+
5,857km
2
people working with BV on local
marine conservation initiatives
of ocean and marine habitat
managed by communities
working with BV
This [LMMA] model benefits not only biodiversity
but also local communities, by ensuring their food security and
empowering them to be crafters of their own future.
PRESIDENT HERY RAJAONARIMAMPIANINA OF MADAGASCAR
Recent successes
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Creation of the Barren Isles protected area; the largest
LMMA in the Indian Ocean
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Creation of Velondriake; the first LMMA in Madagascar
to embark on registration as a nationally-recognised
protected area
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Expansion of the LMMA model to communities to the
south and north of Velondriake, inspiring and guiding
the creation of large-scale LMMAs around Madagascar
zz
Establishment of over 250 community-managed
temporary fishing closures at sites around Madagascar,
based on a model for community-based fisheries
management first developed in Velondriake
zz
Development of the largest community-based
monitoring programme for artisanal sea turtle and
shark fisheries in the western Indian Ocean
Networking communities
The LMMA approach to coastal management is gaining
Blue Ventures is working to reinforce and develop the
momentum and popularity throughout Madagascar and the
MIHARI network by developing new shared training
Indian Ocean region. Yet despite notable successes, many of
and educational tools and resources, and establishing a
these grassroots conservation initiatives are being developed
coordinated system for monitoring LMMA effectiveness.
in isolation, with limited communication or sharing of
lessons learned between communities.
Our experience in Madagascar has shown that peer-topeer learning is a highly effective tool for building local
capacity and confidence for fisheries management. Since
2012, Madagascar’s LMMAs have been united within an
informal network known as MIHARI, established to provide
a framework for community exchange and dialogue to
NETWORKING LMMA COMMUNITIES
>95
200+
LMMAs in
the western
Indian Ocean
65
LMMAs in
Madagascar
participants
involved
in community exchanges
and partner NGO visits
to date
share local experiences of community-based fisheries
LMMAs are also being developed in Kenya, Tanzania,
management and conservation. MIHARI’s membership
Mozambique and beyond. As in Madagascar, it can be
comprises 134 LMMA villages, organised into 65 discrete
difficult for local communities to communicate between
marine management associations and distributed across
sites and especially across national borders. Following a
over 12 degrees of latitude, from both the Indian Ocean and
series of regional and international LMMA workshops,
Mozambique Channel coasts of Madagascar. Community
we are working to facilitate community exchanges and
leaders meet annually in a national LMMA forum convened
partner NGO visits, hosting people from Kenya, Tanzania,
and supported by NGO partners.
Mozambique, Mauritius, Mexico and the Comoros.
LMMAs supported by Blue Ventures
in Madagascar
Velondriake
Manjaboaka
In response to growing signs of overexploitation of
Located just south of Velondriake and based in the village
fisheries in Andavadoaka, Blue Ventures’ first field site in
of Ambatomilo, Manjaboaka is an LMMA that is following
Madagascar, we worked with the local community to pilot
in the footsteps of its northern neighbour. Since 2010,
and test temporary closures of octopus fishing grounds.
villages in the area have established temporary fishery
These experimental fisheries closures boosted catches and
closures and worked to reduce the use of destructive
fisher incomes, and inspired the creation of ‘Velondriake’
fishing techniques by passing local bylaws based on Dina.
(meaning ‘to live with the sea’), Madagascar’s first LMMA,
Teariake
in 2006. Representatives from Andavadoaka and 24
surrounding villages put in place a management plan that
includes permanent reserves, temporary octopus fishery
closures, community-based aquaculture of seaweed and
sea cucumbers, all regulated through a series of locally
developed and enforced rules (Dina). Preliminary protected
status was granted by the Government of Madagascar in
2010, and definitive protected status is expected to be
acquired in 2015.
I became a member of the Velondriake
Association because this initiative is a way
of nurturing all that is in the sea. If there
were no fishery reserves, there would no
longer be enough octopus, and no heritage
for our children.
FELICIE, 44 YEARS OLD, MARRIED WITH FIVE CHILDREN
50km north of Velondriake around the town of Morombe,
the Teariake LMMA was established to reduce destructive
fishing and poaching by fishers moving between Morombe
and Velondriake. The local management association
adopted the name ‘Teariake’ (meaning ‘to love the sea’)
and is implementing temporary fishery closures and
educational outreach activities tailored to this urban
setting.
Belo sur Mer
The Barren Isles
We are working with Madagascar National Parks to establish
The Barren Isles archipelago is one of the few remaining
a marine extension to the existing terrestrial Kirindy-Mitea
strongholds of thriving marine biodiversity in the western
national park near Belo sur Mer, 200 kilometres north of
Indian Ocean. The productive coral reefs and diverse coastal
Velondriake.
ecosystem support the livelihoods of more than 4,000
Crab and shrimp in the area’s extensive mangrove forests
are major traditional fisheries. Three temporary mangrove
reserves were created in 2011 around the villages of Belo
sur Mer and Antanimanimbo by the local association ‘Be
Andriaky’ (meaning ‘to grow up with the sea’). Since then,
this model has expanded to seven other villages and been
replicated over 25 times.
traditional fishers. Many of these fishers migrate to the
Barren Isles seasonally, covering up to 1,000 km in outrigger
pirogues, in response to declining fisheries. Pressures on
the archipelago have proliferated in recent years, including
unsustainable and destructive fishing, conflict between
small-scale and industrial fishers, and mineral resource
exploration. Responding to these challenges, Blue Ventures
and Madagascar’s Ministry of Environment are working
together to help local coastal communities create an
LMMA around the Barren Isles. In 2014, the Government of
Madagascar granted a two-year preliminary protected status,
making the Barren Isles the country’s largest protected area.
We rebuild tropical fisheries with
coastal communities
Blue Ventures works with coastal communities to develop
transformative approaches for catalysing and sustaining
locally led marine conservation.
We work in places where the ocean is vital to local cultures
and economies, and are committed to protecting marine
biodiversity in ways that benefit coastal people. Our
conservation models are designed to demonstrate that
effective management improves food security and makes
economic sense.
Over the past decade, our innovations have guided national
fisheries policy and been replicated by communities,
NGOs, businesses, donors and government agencies along
thousands of kilometres of coastline. So far our work has
impacted the lives of more than 150,000 coastal people.
Working holistically
Blue Ventures recognises that improving fisheries
management alone is not enough to overcome
the numerous and interrelated drivers of marine
environmental degradation.
Our programmes in Madagascar encompass locally led
marine conservation, sustainable fisheries management,
community-based aquaculture and ecotourism
businesses, educational scholarships and reproductive
health services.
This integrated approach addresses the interconnected
challenges of poor health, unmet family planning needs,
environmental degradation and food insecurity in a
holistic way. It enables communities to manage their
resources sustainably, both now and for the future.
Communities first
Innovation & courage
Above all, we listen to community needs,
We are resourceful and creative. We are prepared
responding in a sensitive and pragmatic way for
to take risks and challenge broken paradigms.
lasting benefits.
Openness & humility
Passion & belief
We are an open source social enterprise.
Our mission is urgent and critical, we believe
We work in a transparent and collaborative way
that our models work, and we are determined to
to pass on what we learn to others who share
get the job done.
our vision and passion.
Valued people & effective teams
Grounded in evidence
We work in diverse and inclusive teams where
We have high standards and are not afraid to
all members have a voice and influence. We are
be self-critical. If we see that something doesn’t
effective because our work is integrated across
work, we change tack until we’re on the right
teams and projects.
course.
IN PARTNERSHIP WITH
For further information or to discuss
partnership opportunities please contact:
Frances Humber
Conservation Programmes Manager
[email protected]
Web: www.blueventures.org
Tel: +44 (0)207 697 8598
Observer Ethical Awards,
runner-up 2010.
Winner, Buckminster
Fuller Challenge, 2011
For work to protect
marine resources and
improve the livelihoods of
poor coastal communities
in Madagascar.
Condé Nast Traveler
Environmental Award, 2009
For two decades, Condé
Nast Traveler has been
honouring environmental
visionaries around the
world who have found
innovative solutions to
seemingly intractable
problems.
Responsible
Tourism Awards
2010: Winner
for “Best
volunteering
organisation”
Responsible Tourism
Awards 2006: highly
commended for
“Best Volunteering
Organisation”
Responsible Tourism
Awards 2004: highly
commended for
“Best in a Marine
Environment”
Ashoka &
National
Geographic
Geotourism
Challenge 2008:
finalist
Changemakers
& National
Geographic
Geotourism
Challenge 2010:
finalist
United Nations
SEED Award
2005: winner,
“Madagascar’s
first experimental
community-run
MPA”
in association with
Responsible Tourism
Awards 2008: highly
commended for
“Best Volunteering
Organisation”
Responsible Tourism
Awards 2007: highly
commended for
“Best in a Marine
Environment”
Enterprising
Young Brits 2005
& 2006: highly
commended,
“Social and
Environment”
Blue Ventures was commended
for creating the Indian Ocean’s
first replicable blueprint for
community-centred marine and
coastal conservation planning.
Responsible Tourism
Awards 2009: highly
commended for
“Best in a marine
environment”
Skal Ecotourism
Awards 2006:
Winner, “General
Countryside”
United Nations
Development
Programme Equator
Prize 2006: the Village
of Andavadoaka,
winner (in partnership)